Tag Archives: Mila Mulroney

Mike was great company. Amusing, affable, a life-of-the-party charmer. He was also needy and driven by a desire to be somebody.

Ever since the mid-â€™60s, when he was a teen disc jockey at CFCY-TV in Charlottetown, Mike dreamed of a career in broadcasting. Critics told him heâ€™d never make it. Your voice is too high. Lose some weight. Duffy ignored them. â€œI was going to get somewhere, despite what everyone thought,â€ he later told the Globe and Mail.Determined to make his name as a political reporter, Duffy moved to Ottawa in 1971 to work on Parliament Hill. After two years with CFRA Radio, he jumped to CBC Radio, then, in

1977, to CBC-TVâ€™s national news. The jolly DJ from P.E.I. had confounded his critics and made it to the show.

Once he got to the top, Duffy worked even harder, earning a reputation for edgy reporting. He covered the fall of Saigon, won an ACTRA award for his coverage of a terrorist attack on the Turkish embassy in Ottawa, and provoked Brian Mulroney into suing him and the CBC over a story about how Mulroneyâ€™s goons backstabbed Joe Clark.

But by 1988, after 10 years as Peter Mansbridgeâ€™s sidekick, Duffy yearned to see his name in lights. When Baton Broadcasting offered him a small fortune to host his own politics show, he seized the opportunity.

Now he had a pulpit to sell the â€œDuffâ€ brand and transform himself into a million-dollar enterprise â€” the Don Cherry of Canadian politics. He worked the Ottawa cocktail circuit and boasted about partying at â€œJoe and Maureenâ€™s,â€ made after-dinner speeches at the Rideau Club, and bragged that he was doing â€œcharity things with Mila.â€ Friends took to calling him Senator Duffy.

â€œMike developed â€˜hostâ€™s disease,â€™â€ says Linden MacIntyre, a Duffy drinking buddy from the Maritimes, now with CBCâ€™s the fifth estate. â€œThatâ€™s where you start to believe all the flattery, believe youâ€™re bigger than the story. The affliction gets worse, the head swells up and anything that threatens your celebrity becomes a problem.â€

So what’s the long term impact?

These days, the ruckus over his residency has the embattled senator scurrying out back doors and hiding in hotel kitchens to avoid inconvenient questions from the media.

I remember a time when the old Mike Duffy, award-winning CBC reporter, would barge through those kitchen doors and demand that Senator Duffy explain himself.But that was long ago.

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This is a weblog about urban issues, technology, & culture published by Jordon Cooper since 2001. You can read about me and the site here and if you are looking for one of my columns in The StarPhoenix, you can find them here.